Politely decline to be prime minister, and hand the baton to someone else in the BJP -- like Sonia did to Manmohan Singh -- advises Krishna Prasad.
Now that Narendra Damodardas Modi has been 'elected' leader of the National Democratic Alliance and addressed the NDA parliamentary party to the choreographed cries of 'Modi, Modi, Modi', he should do what Sonia Gandhi did in 2004.
Politely decline to be prime minister, and hand the baton to someone else in the BJP -- like Sonia did to Manmohan Singh.
Repeat, politely decline to be prime minister, and hand the baton to someone else in the BJP -- like Sonia did, to Manmohan Singh.
Of course, he won't.
There is too much ego, too much pride, too much arrogance, too much self-esteem.
And, there are too many hot cakes in the oven -- Adani, Ambani, China, Covid, DeMo, Electoral Bonds, exit polls, Mehul Choksi, Nirav Modi, Pegasus, PM Cares, Rafale, Ramdev, Vedanta, Vijay Mallya alphabetically speaking -- that can burn.
Plus, there is that indescribably divine feeling that God (obviously a Hindu one, and a male) has only sent him and him alone to beat Jawaharlal Nehru's record of three terms as PM and no one else is qualified to rewrite his Wiki entry to send to the Guinness folk, except his minions at IT Cell.
Apres moi, le deluge.
Or, મારા પછી પ્રલય (Deluge after me).
Moreover, having surrounded himself with chamchas and chamchis whose IQ can be measured on the Richter Scale, it is unlikely anyone would counsel Modi to not go for a third serving.
After all, they have EMIs to pay, even if it is by using UPI.
Still, when he presses the remote control to switch off the electric products tonight, Vishwa Guru-turned-Vishwa Mitra-turned-Vishwa Bandhu should ask himself a simple question: Is he really cut out for this new role?
Repeat, is he really cut out for it?
As the first Twitter handle in the world to ask 'Will Narendra Modi be PM?' in 2007, permit yours truly to say he is not.
And here are ten reasons why:
Of course, it is impossible that these thoughts would not have crossed Narendra Modi's mind since June 4.
But it is unlikely he would have found it in him to listen to his 'inner voice' as Sonia Gandhi did 20 years ago.
Unless, his alma mater, the RSS, makes him hear it as they did L K Advani.
All those who think he is a miracle man who will magically reinvent himself when coalition push comes to shove haven't clearly heard Maneka Gandhi's favourite proverb, that you cannot teach an ageing Husky new tricks.
Feature Presentation: Aslam Hunani/Rediff.com
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